Greece – Selling Out To The Establishment?
Alexis Tsipras, Prime Minister of Greece, has sold his country out to the failed ideas of the Euro. There is no possible way for this deal to work. It will bring only more austerity to Greece which will continue to grind its economy to a halt. Raising taxes will not create jobs and it will not restore Greece as a workable economy.
What is being ignored here is simply that Greece is just the canary in the coal mine. It is the first to die from a system of excessive debt and rising taxes. This is the trend in all Western economies and until some Big Bang, our present flock of world leaders are just brain-dead when it comes to economics. They have all viewed the people as worthless sheep who are there to serve them. We take it every time. Even though the people in Greece gave a resounding referendum, even Tsipras interprets it to his own advantage and is selling his own country to Brussels for a handful of silver coins.
The Greek PM says that his government has a strong mandate to complete negotiations with its creditors towards a viable solution. Yet there is no viable solution. The more they hunt down money to tax, the less economic activity will emerge and their tax revenues will continue to decline, making their assumptions the dreams of fools.
A group of economists have even pleaded with Angela Merkel: “Madam Chancellor, we ask you to take on the vital leadership role.” They have called upon the federal government for a turn-around on their Greece policies. In an open letter to German Chancellor Merkel, they call for a restructuring of the Greek debt in order to prevent an existential crisis of the EU and a further deterioration of the situation in Greece.
Economists call urgently for an end to the austerity policy. “The prescribed medicine has bled the patient, but not cured the disease,” criticized Thomas Piketty, Jeffrey Sachs, former State Secretary at the German Ministry of Economic Affairs Heiner Flassbeck, and two other economists in the letter. Creditors must therefore draw “a course correction” into consideration.
Greece in particular needs a “substantial reduction” of its debt burden. The economists remind, in their letter, of the situation in Germany in the ;50s, when a debt laid the foundation for the German economic recovery.
Of course Merkel ignored the letter, for it is against her personal agenda. Yet what we must understand is this situation is by no means unique to Greece. This is the start of a Big Bang and as the rest of the Western nations raise taxes, the economy is about to fall off a cliff and bring economic activity into a swan-dive. Those nations will, as always, blame the private sector. We can see this decline coming as long-term bonds crashed since May, liquidity has collapsed, and there is excess cash in the short-end keeping interest rates low. We will not only see municipalities decline into a debt crisis like Detroit, but we are staring in the eyes of death insofar as pensions are concerned. Politicians are good for only (1) lies, (2) corruption, (3) debt, (4) taxes, and (5) death and war. As Ben Franklin said – the two things that are certain are death and taxes.
Disclosure: None.
Interesting article, thanks for sharing.